‘You are safe’: Edan Alexander speaks to his mother after release
A clip showing US-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander speaking to his mother following his release from Hamas captivity has been shared on social media.
In the clip, Yael Alexander is heard telling her son:
You are strong. You are safe. You are home. We’ll see each other soon. I love you,
Key events
Kibbutz Nir Oz in southern Israel said it is “deeply moved” by the release of US-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander, but said it showed that the lives of hostages with US citizenship are “worth less”.
A statement by the kibbutz reads:
It is hard to ignore the difficult message that the citizens of the State of Israel are receiving today, and which is being conveyed to the entire world: Our lives are worth less.
A hostage with an American passport is given priority, while the other 58 hostages are left behind — including 14 members of the Nir Oz community.
“Every hostage who returns is a great light in the darkness we are in,” the statement continues.
Al Jazeera can resume working in the Palestinian territories, the network’s Ramallah bureau chief said, after Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas lifted a ban imposed earlier this year.
Waleed Omari, the bureau chief of Al Jazeera in Jerusalem and Ramallah, said in a statement on Monday:
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has decided to lift the ban on the Al Jazeera network and allow its crews to resume work in the Palestinian territories starting tomorrow morning.
The decision comes after Al Jazeera’s operations were halted in the Palestinian territories in January, after the Palestinian Authority (PA) accused the network of “inciting material”.
At the time of the channel’s suspension, PA security forces had been engaged in weeks of deadly clashes with militant fighters in the Jenin camp in the Israeli-occupied West Bank.
Al Jazeera remains banned from broadcasting from Israel.
‘You are safe’: Edan Alexander speaks to his mother after release
A clip showing US-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander speaking to his mother following his release from Hamas captivity has been shared on social media.
In the clip, Yael Alexander is heard telling her son:
You are strong. You are safe. You are home. We’ll see each other soon. I love you,

Ruth Michaelson
The Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK) has announced it will disarm and disband, after a call from its jailed leader Abdullah Öcalan earlier this year.
Leaders of the militia group, which is regarded as a terrorist organisation in Turkey, the UK and the US, said their armed insurgency had “brought the Kurdish issue to the point of resolution through democratic politics, and in this regard the PKK has completed its historical mission.”
The announcement that the militia will end decades of fighting will affect forces based near Turkey’s borders with Iraq and Iran, as well as allied or splinter groups in north-east Syria.
Despite the PKK announcement of a “new phase”, the decision to disarm and dissolve appeared to be unilateral, with few public indications about authorities in Ankara offering dialogue.
The decision follows months of outreach to Kurdish political leaders in Turkey by the nationalist politician Devlet Bahçeli, a coalition partner of the president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s Justice and Development party (AKP). Erdoğan welcomed the PKK’s decision, saying:
With terror and violence being completely disengaged, the doors of a new era in every area, namely strengthening politics and democratic capacity, will be opened.
Israel’s president Isaac Herzog said he watched “with great emotion” the release of Israeli-American hostage Edan Alexander “from darkness to light”.
“Welcome home, Edan. We waited for you so long,” Herzog wrote in a post on X.
He said he watched Alexander’s release with Germany’s chancellor, Friedrich Merz. Herzog added:
I send a huge hug to your heroic parents, incredible grandmother, and your entire family.
Merz welcomed Herzog for a meeting in Berlin earlier today, and noted that the Israeli president is the first foreign leader he has hosted since taking office last week.
Herzog is scheduled to be hosted by German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier for a state dinner this evening, then return to Israel tomorrow morning.

Jason Burke
Gaza is at “critical risk of famine”, food security experts have warned, 10 weeks after Israel imposed a blockade on the devastated Palestinian territory, cutting off all supplies including food, medicine, shelter and fuel.
In its most recent report, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said on Monday there had been a “major deterioration” in the food security situation in Gaza since its last assessment in October 2024 and that Palestinians living there faced “a critical risk of famine”.
The IPC, a consortium of independent specialists tasked by the UN and international NGOs with assessing the risk of famine in crises worldwide, said:
Goods indispensable for people’s survival are either depleted or expected to run out in the coming weeks. The entire population is facing high levels of acute food insecurity, with half a million people – one in five – facing starvation.
Aid workers in Gaza told the Guardian that prices for essentials had risen further in recent days, warehouses were empty and humanitarian teams treating malnourished children were being forced to divide rations designed for one between two patients to give both a chance of survival.
Jonathan Crickx, a spokesperson for Unicef speaking from southern Gaza, said:
The stocks we brought in during the [two-month-long] ceasefire are running very low. We have treated more than 11,000 children since the beginning of the year … In coming weeks, we fear we will see more children dying.
The Hostages and Missing Families Forum said it welcomes the release of Edan Alexander after 584 days of captivity.
A statement from the group reads:
We embrace you, Edan, and are so glad you are home. We hope your return is the beginning of a comprehensive agreement that is needed to bring all 58 hostages home.
Netanyahu credits military pressure and US diplomacy for Edan Alexander’s release
Benjamin Netanyahu has credited the release of US-Israeli hostage Edan Alexander to Israeli military pressure and “political pressure” from the US president, Donald Trump.
Netanyahu, in a video statement published by his office, said:
This is a very emotional moment – Edan Alexander has come home. We embrace him, and we embrace his family. This was achieved thanks to our military pressure and the political pressure exerted by President Trump. This is a winning combination.
The Israeli prime minister added that he had spoken with Trump, who reaffirmed his commitment to Israel and promised to work “in close cooperation” to release the remaining hostages and defeat Hamas.
Edan Alexander arrives at IDF facility for medical assessment
Edan Alexander, the Israeli-American hostage who was released earlier today, has arrived at an Israel Defense Forces (IDF) facility near the border community of Re’im in southern Israel.
An IDF statement says Alexander will undergo an initial physical and mental checkup and be reunited with his family after he was escorted out of Gaza by Israeli troops.
His father, Adi Alexander, was taken by an Israeli air force helicopter to Re’im shortly after arriving in the country from the US, the Times of Israel reports, citing an Israeli defence official.
His mother arrived at the Re’im base earlier today.

Jason Burke
Gaza is at “critical risk of famine”, food security experts have warned, 10 weeks after Israel imposed a blockade on the devastated Palestinian territory, cutting off all supplies including food, medicine, shelter and fuel.
In its most recent report, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said on Monday there had been a “major deterioration” in the food security situation in Gaza since its last assessment in October 2024 and that Palestinians living there faced “a critical risk of famine”.
“Goods indispensable for people’s survival are either depleted or expected to run out in the coming weeks. The entire population is facing high levels of acute food insecurity, with half a million people – one in five – facing starvation,” said the IPC, a consortium of independent specialists tasked by the UN and international NGOs with assessing the risk of famine in crises worldwide.
Israel imposed its strict blockade in early March, after the end of the first phase of a supposed three-phase ceasefire. Just over two weeks later, a new wave of attacks by the Israeli military definitively ended the truce.
Faisal Ali
US president Donald Trump has said he is considering lifting sanctions on Syria, following the UK’s lead, which removed some of its own sanctions in late April.
Speaking at a press conference at the White House, Trump said he was mulling the move after Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, raised the issue.
Trump said: “We may take them off of Syria, because we want to give them a fresh start.”
He added: “President Erdogan’s asked me about that, many people have asked me about that because the way we have them sanctioned doesn’t really them much of a start. We want to see if we can help them out.”
Syria’s interim president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, visited Paris last week, where he met with French President Emmanuel Macron, who similarly voiced his support for lifting EU-wide sanctions on the new government.
After their meeting, Macron said that if al-Sharaa “continues on his path” and guarantees were provided that international funds would be used appropriately, France would push for the lifting of European sanctions and lobby Trump to do the same.
Edan Alexander safely handed to Israeli forces
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has confirmed that it “facilitated the safe transfer of a hostage from Gaza to Israeli authorities”.
Reuters reported that the Israeli military also confirmed receiving the US-Israeli citizen hostage Edan Alexander.
Donald Trump defended his decision to accept the gift of a plane from Qatar at a press conference on Monday.
“They’re giving us a free jet,” said the US president, “I could say no, no, no, don’t give us, I wanna pay you $1bn or $400m or whatever it is, or I could say thank you very much.”